Why You Should Read MARVEL SUPER HEROES SECRET WARS

Back in the mid-80s, comic book crossovers weren't a common thing. That may be hard to believe but there weren't huge events occurring each month in one comic or another. When Marvel was approached by Mattel to create an event they could build a toy line around, soon the premise of this story began to unfold. The result would be a handful of Marvel heroes and villains fighting each other on a distant world in MARVEL SUPER HEROES SECRET WARS.

Covers to issues 1-6.

This may have started as a way to appease a toy company but Jim Shooter, the series writer and Marvel Editor-in-Chief at the time, made it much more than that. It was indeed an event and affected the titles of the characters involved.

The premise of the story was an omnipotent being from beyond, referred to as the Beyonder by the characters, discovered the Marvel Universe. He created Battleworld, a planet comprised of pieces of other planets, and teleported several heroes and villains with the purpose of fighting one another with the victor able to claim all that they desired. The series was tied into the characters' regular titles when we saw some of them discover a strange structure in Central Park. Upon investigating, they disappeared and were teleported away.

This wasn't just a simple story of heroes fighting villains. It was the opportunity for the first meetings of several of these characters. We got to see how Rhodey mix it up with the other heroes early in his career, Magneto was deemed to be a hero despite the opinion of the others, a certain X-Men character did some things that caused the end of a long term relationship, the Thing discovered something about his powers, Julia Carpenter was introduced and, of course, Spider-Man discovered the symbiote Venom costume. Hulk also showed he could lift one hundred and fifty billion tons of mountain.

This was a crossover/team-up that mattered. There were repercussions that were felt in the characters' individual titles for years to come. In an interesting move, the characters disappeared one month in their titles and returned the following month. This gave readers a heads up as to what the mini-series could expect (for example, the Venom symbiote actually appeared the second month in AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #252 while it first appeared in the eighth issue of the series).

I may have a bit of nostalgia over this series. But it contained all the major heroes and villains without becoming a convoluted mess as we sometimes see in today's major comic book events. Even though the characters had existed in the Marvel Universe for a couple decades, there was still a sense of everything being new.

A lot may have happened in the Marvel Universe since. This is an important piece of history for many of the characters and works as a good introduction to new readers. We don't have to have a bunch of tie-in issues and stories. All we need is one great story that stands the test of time.

Its essentially Marvel's equal to DC's Crisis on Infinite Earths in the sense that it was the biggest crossover event in the company up to that time. A definite must read, even if essentially the Beyonder of that event no longer exists in the MU.

I just wish Kitty would have been in this. She was originally but apparently it was felt by some at Marvel that Colossus was too old for Kitty so that whole contrived love story with the alien on Beyonder's world happened. The series is great otherwise.

This is one of those stories I've been trying to read but haven't had time or haven't found it. Plus I also wanted to read Crisis on Infinite Earths first, which I did and I very much enjoyed it. I do believe I will buy Secret Wars, if I can find a decent cheap copy of the Trade. To the Internet!

Fond memories of this series. Wonderful bit of nostalgia, hate to think this all happened so long ago already. I still cringe at Beyonder's hair-do and his get-up. However, Hulk lifting a mountain made up for it all, not to mention Dr. Doom and Reed Richards at his best using his cranium. Can't forget Spidey!

Thanks for posting this and giving newer and younger readers a bit of history regarding what has to be one of Marvel's Top 10 events.

Jim Shooter goes out of his way to lampoon his political opposite, Steve Gerber, but I remember even as a kid, when I read that I kinda felt like saying 'yeah' to some of what Thundersword was saying - even as hyperbolic and hypocritical as it may have seemed.

I remember collecting the action figures back in the 80's. I was too young to keep up with the series but read it as a young adult. It wasn't bad, but it wasn't everything I was expecting either. I kinda think this story gets too much credit.

I liked it. The toy line was pretty cool, too. I was blown away by action figures when I was a kid - the idea that you could read a story featuring a character and then have a 3-d, plastic version to play with in real life made my five-six year old head expand. Also - this series really impressed the idea on me that despite a character getting top billing in their book, they might be small potatoes or mid-tier in the overall universe they inhabited - seeing Spiderman own the X-Men was pretty funny, for example.

This and the Secret Wars II were awesome. There were so many great character developments (good guys and bad guys), the plot with the Beyonder was interesting and it was pretty much the only time a Marvel crossover worked.

I own a few original issues of Secret Wars and the Secret Wars II omnibus, so I know of what I speak.

I gotta check some of trades out for secret wars.. I hope they are not expensive.

Doom's battle against Beyonder was epic and the second half is pretty good, also it's one of the first really big crossover's in Marvel, and it deserves some credit because of that... but... I don't know, I don't belive this is a good comic, I mean... the art is pretty weak for the most part and most of the characters are poorly written (at the heroes side the X-Men took the worst part -especially Wolverine- and at the villains side almost every villain just become a mindless Dr.Doom's henchman).

Yes, it's a classic and all but if you want to read a huge crossover with the heroes figthing and almighty villain you better read the Infinite Gauntlet story or even DC's Crisis on Infinite Earths (way bigger and way better than this one).

I'd love to read this some time. I've only been reading comics for a few years now, and the only older ones I've gone back and read have been Infinity Gauntlet and Moon Knight. Funnily enough, Moon Knight's first series was cancelled about the time this event happened :)

I've only been actively reading comics since around '03 or '04. Even though I have read a lot of back issue comics, and enjoy many of them, it seems like modern comics have a certain quality to them that is missing in most stuff from the 70's, 80's, and even 90's (stuff from the 60's and earlier is often downright unreadable to me). So when I first started getting issues of Secret Wars packed in with the Hasbro toys, I wasn't expecting much, but wow was I blown away by how good they were. Jim Shooter immediately became a name that I took note of.

The concept sounds so silly, even by comic book standards, but the way it all actually plays out is entirely captivating. Secret Wars is easily one of the best event books ever published. Every Marvel fan should read this series, don't be afraid of it feeling dated.

This is one (along with Secret Wars II) of the first comics I read as a kid, and they completely influenced my understanding of the Marvel Universe, and basically created my love of comics. One of my very favorites.